Hi Norbert, On Mon, Jul 14, 2014 at 08:18:30AM +0200, DEWI - N. Zacharias wrote: > > > > When you do so, you'll realize that you need a Visual Studio C++ > > > > compiler; it won't work if you are using Qt Creator with the > > > > MinGW toolchain. > > > > > > [zac] This means that the use of UNO under Linux is not possible > > > ?? > > > No, as your first post was talking about MS Word, I assumed you are > > working on Windows. > > That is not wrong but I want to change to Linux for some tasks. E.g. > to produce the reports. > > > > If you are going to work with UNO on Windows and with C++, you need > > the Visual C++ compiler (OpenOffice is only 32 bit). > > As far as I understand it is possible to run OO remotely. So why do > 32/64 bit matter ?
It depends on what you are trying to do: - "client applications" connect to the office "from outside", so you can start OpenOffice listening for remote connections on a certain port, the client application can be compiled in a different system and architecture than the "OpenOffice server" - extensions implementing UNO components must be installed in the office; if you are trying to develop a C++ extension, you will need to compile a version for every OS and architecture Regards -- Ariel Constenla-Haile La Plata, Argentina
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